Meeting-room reservations

The use of this calendar is mostly self-explanatory. If you need any assistance, click on the Help link near the top of every page.

Here are the distinguishing features of this calendar software (the MRBS package) compared to the others discussed on this page:

These pages are public. Everyone in the world can see them.

Only users with an account on the Linux cluster can add, change, or delete entries on these calendars. Use the same account name and password that you use to read your mail; if you see a message about a certificate, accept it permanently.

If a given user creates an event on this calendar, only that user can edit or delete that event.

Shared calendars via CalDAV

synchronize your calendars on multiple devices, such as smartphones, tablets, or different computers;

you want to keep both private and public calendars at Nevis;

you want to create calendars that more than one person can edit.

Creating a CalDAV calendar

For a more complete listing of how to configure calendar clients, see the DAViCal website.

Here's how to create/subscribe to calendars on the Nevis CalDAV server using Apple Calendar or BusyCal:

In Apple Calendar, you do this by selecting "Preferences", selecting the Account pane, then hitting the "+" sign in the lower left-hand corner of the pane. In BusyCal, use the Calendar menu and select "Connect to iCloud/CalDAV server".

The account type is "CalDAV".

For account and password, use your standard Nevis account/mail password.

If you want to see any of the other Nevis calendars in Apple Calendar, select the "Delegation" sub-pane. At minimum, you'll probably want "Nevis Group". (In BusyCal, you don't have to do this.)

You will not see any new calendars on the viewcal page (see below). I have to manually edit a script on the web server to make that happen. I'll do that as soon as I see that you've created a calendar of your own, or you can just send me an e-mail.

Apple Calendar tips

If you're having trouble with events being saved from Apple Calendar, go to the Calendar menu, select Preferences..., select Alerts, and make sure that all default alerts are set to "None." In particular, Apple Calendar seems to have trouble saving banner or multi-day events with alerts enabled.

Accessing a Nevis CalDAV calendar on a tablet/smartphone

There are a number of devices and operating systems, so it's hard to give a step-by-step guide. Here are the general rules:

In iOS, you subscribe to calendars using the Setting app, then going to "Mail, Contacts, Calendars".

Use your Nevis account name and password, no matter whose calendar you're viewing.

The server name is calendar.nevis.columbia.edu

Apple's iOS will incorrectly guess the location of the calendar and give you an error message. To access your Nevis calendar, go to the advanced settings and enter the URL for your calendar; e.g., https://calendar.nevis.columbia.edu/caldav/caldav.php/ACCOUNT/.

Make sure SSL is turned on.

Unlike Apple Calendar or BusyCal, you'll probably have to subscribe to each additional calendar individually, with a separate "account" for each one (or each group). Examples:

To subscribe to the Nevis holiday and general calendars, create a new account with the URL https://calendar.nevis.columbia.edu/caldav/caldav.php/nevis/

To subscribe to the calendar(s) for account rdoe (whether or not you're rdoe), use the URL https://calendar.nevis.columbia.edu/caldav/caldav.php/rdoe/

Multiple CalDAV calendars

When you first login to the Nevis CalDAV server, a default calendar is created for you. You can create additional calendars under your account; e.g., one for classes, one for meetings, etc. Look for a button with a "+" sign in the same screen or panel that you use to define your CalDAV account.

Some things to consider:

Any additional calendars will not automatically show up on the viewcal page (see below). I have to manually edit a script on the web server to make that happen.

By default, everyone with a Nevis account will able to see any additional calendars you create. If you'd like to restrict access to a given calendar, see the next section.

CalDAV access control

One of the nice features of CalDAV is you can fine-tune the access control of your calendar(s). For example, you can keep a separate calendar with a schedule of doctor's appointments, and make it visible only to you; you can create a calendar for group meetings, and allow selected people with Nevis CalDAV accounts to make their own entries into the calendar. For an example of the latter, see the "other" or "Nevis General" calendar under "Nevis Group".

The web interface for the Nevis CalDAV server is https://calendar.nevis.columbia.edu/caldav/; login with your Nevis account name and password.

You'll probably be a bit confused by the CalDAV nomenclature ("What the heck is a principle?") but eventually it begins to make sense.

Shared public calendars via WebDAV

WebDAV is an older calendar protocol which is gradually becoming obsolete, mainly because it's not as good a protocol for sharing calendars between different machines. However, it's good enough if you're only going to access your calendar with a single laptop. Among the programs that can use WebDAV are:

To use these programs to share calendars at Nevis, you'll want to either publish your own calendar or subscribe to an existing one. For example, you can subscribe to https://calendar.nevis.columbia.edu/calendar/university-holidays.ics, which contains Columbia University holidays.

Here are the distinguishing features of this calendar software (compared to the others discussed on this page):

Only users with an account on the Linux cluster can even see these calendars. They cannot be generally viewed by the rest of the world. (Use the same account name and password that you use to read your mail; if you see a message about a certificate, accept it permanently.)

If you want to create your own calendar files to share, you can. Just "publish" or "subscribe" to a calendar using the same naming scheme as the files above: https://www.nevis.columbia.edu/calendar/<whatever>.ics. Note that the file name must end in .ics, otherwise it will be rejected.

By default, anyone at Nevis using Sunbird can add, modify, or delete events on any of the calendars that have been published using the above method.

If you contact me, I can arrange for a calendar file to be restricted so only a single user (or a small number of users) can edit the calendar. However, for this kind of security, CalDAV is better (see above).

There's a hint of "security through obscurity" here: If you don't know the name of a calendar file, you won't be able to subscribe to it. However, you can see a list of available calendars through the calendar viewing page described in the next section. Just take the name you see on that page, add https://calendar.nevis.columbia.edu/calendar/ before it, add .ics after it, and you have the name to which you can subscribe.

If this trick doesn't work, it means the calendar is hosted by CalDAV; see above.

Only users with an account on the Linux cluster can access the calendar viewer. They cannot be generally viewed by the rest of the world. (Use the same account name and password that you use to read your mail; if you see a message about a certificate, accept it permanently.)

The navigation buttons and links are not as intuitive as I would like. (I'm using the PHP iCalendar package.)

By default, you see everyone's calendar. You can restrict the list using the "Preferences" link on the viewer page.

As noted above, you can only view calendars, you cannot edit them.

If you have a calendar on any CalDAV server (Google Calendars, the Nevis server described above, etc.) it can be displayed on this page. Send me the calendar URL (available from the Shared Settings page for the calendar) and I'll include it on the list.